Talk:Mount Smart Stadium

Latest comment: 23 days ago by MrDeclanDwight in topic Supertop or Mt Smart Stadium?

History of Mt Smart Stadium

edit

The land occupied by the stadium which was first developed by the Mt Smart Domain Trust(MSDT) was generally believed to have been donated by Sir Maurice O'Rourke who maintained a large home with stables and extensive gardens on ten acres of land on the northern slopes of the mountain. O'Rourke was at times Speaker of the House of Parliament and Chancellor of Auckland University. Starting approximately in the 1930's the mountain was quarried away with steam powered excavators, the rock (mostly scoria) crushed and loaded in railway wagons (which utilized a spurline off the Penrose - Onehunga line) and used as railway ballast by New Zealand Railways. The MSDT received royalties.

From 1940 through through the early 1960's when it was acquired by the MSDT, the O'Rourke property was owned by Veterinary Surgeon Herbert Clinton Kennan who operated the Blue Cross Hospital. The house was destroyed by fire in 1966.

How do I know all this? I lived there 1940 though 1963. Veterinary Surgeon Herbert Clinton Kennan was my father.

Peter Perry Kennan pkennan@msn.com 66.65.153.166 (talk) 20:00, 12 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

Supertop or Mt Smart Stadium?

edit

Many of the concerts listed here were not in the stadium itself, but adjacent to it, in the giant marquee called the Supertop. Of the ones listed here, this includes at least Eric Clapton, Bob Dylan, Guns 'N Roses, The Cure, MC Hammer, Red Hot Chilli Peppers, Bon Jovi, Pearl Jam, and KISS. It's inaccurate to lump these concerts under the "stadium" because that was not the venue. Mentioning the seating capacity of the stadium is misleading in this context because those artists who performed in the Supertop would have played to no more than 13,000 people. https://www.infonews.co.nz/news.cfm?id=48374 MrDeclanDwight (talk) 01:35, 11 November 2024 (UTC)Reply